Film Description
from Toronto International Film Festival Programme

When
Maureen Giorgio (Jane Curtin) says I thought the cheese was slipping
off my cracker for awhile, she conveys the generally flustered esprit
of the Giorgio family. Brooklyn Lobsters gentle humour articulates
the bittersweet nature of change as it recounts the challenges of living
a small-town life in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, in multi-cultural New York
City.

Kevin Jordan (whose
Smiling Fish and Goat on Fire won the Discovery Award at the Toronto
International Film Festival in 1999) shows genuine affection for every
member in this wacky family portrait, perhaps because it is based on his
own familys lobster shop. Frank Giorgio (a commanding role for Danny
Aiello) stands out as an aging patriarch trying to maintain his Brooklyn
pride when the bank that holds the small business loan for his lobster
farm forecloses. A hardworking man who listens to only oldies on the radio,
Frank sees his worth as inextricably tied to his company. It is just this
traditional attitude that has alienated his wife (Curtin) and grown-up
children (understated but powerful performances by Daniel Sauli and Marisa
Ryan). Much of the pathos and the comedy of the film comes from the viewers
understanding that Frank must temper his resistance to change and learn
to express his love for his family in a more - or less? - conventional
way if he is to find contentment. Curtin is formidable and funny as the
woman who loves Frank but cant shake the feeling there is more for
her out there in the world.

The
cast of sharply original characters pair with the distinctive location
settings to lend the film loads of old-world charm. Nevertheless, Aiellos
Frank is the most compelling of all. Though he is supported by the love
of his family and a close-knit community, they can only stand by helplessly
as he ignores advice and stubbornly makes mistakes. Amid the films
lovely, spot-on nostalgia, Frank is a reminder that sometimes it is time
to change the tune on the radio to something less familiar.

- Michèle
Maheux Managing Director
Toronto International Film Festival Group